Nouvoyance's own diagram of the PenTile subpixel arrangement explains it pretty well: it uses a third fewer subpixels per pixel. Specifically, each pixel has one green subpixel, and one double-wide red or blue subpixel, so what you end up with, says Ars, is that "half the red and half the blue spatial information in the 2D image being sent to the display is simply thrown away or spread to the nearest matching subpixel by a convolution or intensity-dispersion process." So if you count pixels by RGB subpixel triplets, the math looks like this, using a weighted sum: (480*800/2)*2/3 + (480*800)*1/3 = 256,000 (versus 384,000 claimed).

Which is why text on the screen doesn't look quite as sharp as the Droid's and you wind up with the odd color banding with certain images. Ars has more tests you can try on your own Nexus One using grayscale patterns to show some of the funkiness going on. All that said, there's no reason to dump your Nexus One—you might not notice, or even care, as many haven't. Even we thought the screen looked great in our review. But it's still a pretty fascinating dive on the Nexus One screen tech that's worth reading: [Ars}